A portion of a network, which may be physically independent, that shares a network address with other portions of the network and is distinguished by a subnet number Subnets are created and supported by the use of routing
A part of the network Computers on the same subnet have a specific number of leading bits in their IP address that are fixed (same) Geographically distinct locations usually belong to different subnets
A portion of a network, which may be a physically independent network segment, which shares a network address with other portions of the network and is distinguished by a subnet number A subnet is to a network what a network is to an internet See also: internet, network [Source: FYI4] [RFC 1983]
This is a term that refers to a group of TCP/IP addresses Addresses in the same subnet are reachable without going through a router, and thus can be reached by broadcast To reach addresses outside of a particular subnet, you must transmit through a router This is all part of the TCP/IP protocol Queen's generally segregates subnets by the third part of the numeric address (for example, '130 15 48 *')
A logical collection of up to 127 devices within a domain Up to 255 subnets can be defined within a single domain All devices in a subnet must be on the same segment Subnets cannot cross non-permanent type routers
Logical division of an IP network by address groupings, separated by a TCP/IP router
An interconnected, but independent segment of a network that is identified by its Internet Protocol (IP) address
A subset of a larger network Each subnet within a network shares a common network address and is uniquely identified by a subnet address
A working scheme that divides a single logical network into smaller physical networks to simplify routing
A portion of a network (which may be a physically independent network segment) that shares a network address with other portions of the network and is distinguished by a subnet address A subnet is to a network what a network is to the Internet See also Internet, network
An IP address range that is part of a larger range For instance, 192 168 1 0 is a subnet of 192 168 0 0 (where 0 is a mask meaning “undefined”); it is, in fact, the “ 1” subnet
A subdivision of a project network diagram usually representing some form of subproject
A group of machines that share information and resources A subsection of a network
A subnet is a section of the campus' TCP/IP network Each subnet has a unique subnet number Each subnet is then connected to a router which effectively connect it to all other subnets on campus
One or more physical networks forming a subset of an Internet network A subnet is explicitly identified in the Internet address
A logical subset of all systems on a network Typically, all systems on a subnet are physically close to each other, for example, are all located in the same building
In TCP/IP, a part of a network that is identified by a portion of the IP address
A section of a network Generally, machines within the same subnet will be physically near to each other and will have IP addresses that begin with the same two or three numbers
{i} (Computers) separate division of a larger computer network; physical network of an internet (Internet); division of a computer network (in IP)
A subnet is a portion of a larger network address It is defined by a subnet address and a subnet mask This allows the administrator to physically separate related machines and localise traffic Hosts on these subnets can communicate across a routed network, which is ideal for separating workgroups within a company, or for smaller companies when attached to one ISP
A group of IP addresses which are logically one network, typically (but not always) assigned to a group of physically connected machines The range of addresses in a subnet is described using a subnet mask See next entry
Network segment term In IP networks, the network shares a particular subnet address